Tag: detainees

  • DSS BEGINS MASS RELEASE OF DETAINEES

    •Seven Ijaw youths detained for two years arrive Bayelsa
    •We were held in underground cell, say ex-detainees

    The new leadership of the Department of State Security (DSS) may have started making good its promise to review cases of all detainees in its custody, according to indications yesterday.

    Seven Ijaw youths from Bayelsa State who were arrested two years ago and locked up in the organization’s cell since then were yesterday set free in Yenagoa.

    The agency’s newly appointed Acting Director -General, Mr. Mathew Seiyefa, told reporters at his maiden press conference two weeks ago that he would review the cases of detainees with a view to setting free those who are not supposed to be held.

    The seven Bayelsa men were brought from the DSS Headquarters in Abuja to Yenagoa at the weekend and released to their families who had gathered outside the agency’s office in the state capital to receive them.

    Some of the suspects shed tears of joy in the warm embrace of their friends as they walked into freedom.

    The suspects looked unkempt with overgrown beards, rough skin and dirty clothes.

    One of them, who identified himself as Clinton Ohaigbofa, said suspects held without trial were being massively released across the country.

    He hails from Ebedebiri in Ogbia Local Government Area.

    He said they were held in underground cells in Abuja and went through untold hardship.

    They were never charged to court, he said.

    Narrating how they landed in DSS detention, he said: “We didn’t do anything. We were arrested on May 24th, 2016. We were taken to the JTF headquarters in Opolo and were later transferred to DMI, Abuja.

    “After interrogation, we were transferred to Defence Intelligence Agency. On August 26, 2016, we were transferred to the Department of State Service, Abuja. We stayed there for over two years.”

    Reliving their ordeals in the DSS cell, he said: “They treated us badly. We were held in an underground cell. They gave us little bread in the morning, little rice in the afternoon and a morsel of semovita in the evening.

    “Each portion of food cannot satisfy a two-year old baby. They deprived us of everything. They didn’t even take us to court. There was no freedom to even see light.  They subjected us to severe punishment. They kept us hungry and deprived us of medication. Suspects are being released massively because of the new DSS boss. I don’t know the actual number released so far. But we thank the new DSS boss.”

  • 6,512 Boko Haram detainees, toddlers in custody, says panel

    Secretary to the Government of the Federation Mr. Boss Mustapha on Tuesday received the final report of the Presidential Committee on Special Detainees linked to Boko Haram Insurgency.

    The report indicated that 6,512 detainees, including toddlers who followed their mothers, were detention.

    A statement by Director, Information, Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (OSGF), Lawrence Ojabo, said the five chapters, 47-page report contained detailed information on detainees’ profiles and categorisation.

    Receiving the report from the committee chairman, Gen. Abdullahi Bagudu Mamman, the SGF, who was represented by his Permanent Secretary, General Services Office, Olusegun Adeyemi Adekunle, hailed the committee for their painstaking efforts and for doing a good job.

    He lauded Minister of Interior, Lt.-Gen (rtd) Abdulrahaman Danbazzau for initiating the committee and the idea of looking into the welfare of the detainees.

    He noted the urgency expressed by the committee’s chairman on the aspects of international relations, inadequate infrastructure and human rights of the detainees.

    The report, Adekunle said, would be forwarded to the President for his action.

    Gen. Mamman (rtd) said the committee was inaugurated in December 2016 with the mandate of profiling and categorising the Boko Haram detainees in the various detention prisons across the country.

    According to him, some detainees had spent up to nine years awaiting trial.

    He called for justice for suspects who might be innocent.

  • Boko Haram: Committee submits reports, identifies 6,512 detainees

    The Presidential Committee on Boko Haram Detainees has submitted its reports, identifying 6,512 detainees including toddlers, who followed their mothers into detention.

    The Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Mr Boss Mustapha, commended the efforts of the committee, when he received the reports in Abuja on Wednesday.

    Mr Lawrence Ojabo, the Director Press, Office of the Secretary to the Government of the Federation (OSGF) quoted the SGF as giving the commendation on Wednesday in Abuja.

    Mustapha, who received the final report of the Presidential Committee on Special Detainees linked to Boko Haram Insurgency, thanked the committee for a good job.

    He noted that the report was compiled in five chapters, with detailed information on detainees’ profiles and categorisation.

    The SGF spoke through Mr Olusegun Adekunle, the Permanent Secretary, General Services Office, OSGF, at the presentation of the report by the Chairman of the committee, General Abdullahi Mamman (rtd).

    Mustapha also applauded the Minister of Interior, Lt.-Gen. Abdulrahaman Danbazzau (rtd), for initiating the committee and the idea of looking into the welfare of the unfortunate citizens.

    He promised to forward the report to President Muhammadu Buhari immediately, due to its urgency as stated by the chairman of the committee, especially on the aspects of international relations, inadequate infrastructure, and human rights.

    The SGF further reiterated the commitment of the present administration to address all security challenges ravaging the country.

    He also assured the committee that the report would be given quick attention with the view to implementing all the recommendations.

    Earlier, Mamman said the committee was inaugurated in December 2016 with the mandate of profiling and categorising the Boko Haram detainees in detention across the country.

    He disclosed that 6,512 detainees were identified including toddlers, who followed their mothers into detention.

    Mamman also mentioned that some detainees had spent up to nine years awaiting trial, calling for justice for suspects who might be innocent.

    The chairman commended President Buhari for taking the plight of Nigerians seriously, thanking him for giving them this task.

    He added that they were ready to make themselves available for future assignment.

    The Permanent Secretary, Political and Economic Affairs Office, OSGF, Mr Gabriel Aduda, also commended the Committee for its patriotism, passion and doggedness in carrying out the assignment.

    NAN

     

  • Citizens’ Rights to free ‘illegal detainees’

    SOME  Ikoyi Prison inmates believed to be held illegally will soon regain their freedom,  the Directorate of Citizens’ Rights (DCR) has said.

    The DCR Director,  Mrs Omololu Adesina, made this promise after visiting the prison.

    Over 500 inmates are said to be victims of circumstance,  with some of them not having lawyers.

    In a statement, Mrs Adesina said: “We met a number of inmates allegedly raided in different parts of the state. When the police arrest people and they are detained by the order of court, their parents or guardians may not know where they are.  When this kind of situation arises, it is the duty of agencies of government like ours to intervene and make necessary recommendations.

    “That is why our office collaborates with other agencies of the Ministry of Justice to defend the defenceless and offer non-custodian sentences where offenders plead guilty especially people that have no money to defend themselves.

    “Our office defends indigent citizens who have no money to employ the services of a lawyer. That is why our services are free of charge.”

    She said many indigent inmates could be in prison  longer than necessary if the  government did not come in through the directorate.

    Mrs Adeshina : “We are not condoning criminality.  We only don’t want them to be awaiting trial perpetually and

  • AGF decries increase in detainees without trial

    The Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice Abubakar Malami (SAN) has expressed concerns that awaiting trial inmates constitute 70 per cent of the nation’s prison population.

    Malami said the development was a violation of the rights of inmates, which must be reversed through deliberate efforts of the state to decongest the prisons.

    Deputy Director (Information) in the Federal Minister of Justice, Ogundoro Modupe, quoted the AGF as speaking when he led the Federal Government Stakeholders Committee on Prison Decongestion to Rivers and Imo states on February 5 and 6.

    Malami decried the unchecked violation of fundamental rights of prison inmates across the country, explaining that the purpose of the visit was to oversee the implementation of the Federal Executive Council’s directive in fast-tracking the decongestion of prisons.

    He added that the Committee would also review cases of inmates who have been convicted of minor offences with option of fines and are unable to pay.

    According to Malami, “The committee wishes to secure the release of as many of such inmates as possible through the payment of their fines.

    “I am therefore pleased to announce that the committee will, in addition to ensuring the payment of fines, also conduct a review of cases of inmates awaiting trial for more than five years, in the select priority prisons.

    “These able bodied men represent our potential workforce, they represent tomorrow’s fathers to raise the next generations of Nigerians.

    “We must, therefore, begin to find improved ways of addressing the issue of crime and the treatment of minor offenders in our criminal justice system.”

    The committee’s Chairman and Chief Judge of the High Court of the Federal Capital Territory, Justice Ishaq Bello, during the tour of prisons in Imo State, facilitated the release of 13 inmates, whose fines were settled by the Governor Rochas Okorocha.

    In Rivers, the committee released 26 inmates, among who governor, Nyesom Wike assisted in paying their fines

    Justice Bello also released those whose offences were minor but were either remanded for years without trial or sentenced beyond  the provisions of the law.

    He stated that the problem with  the prisons is not only about the crowded space inmates were subjected to, but also the attendant psychological and emotional impacts.

    Wike flayed the police for delay in charging arrested persons to court, alleging that the this was partly responsible for the swelling figure of inmates.

    Speaking during the meeting with the Committee in Owerri, Okorocha admitted that prison atmosphere in Nigeria cannot guarantee transformation of inmates upon their release.

    He also identified the country’s justice system as part of the factors responsible for prison congestion.

    Okorcha suggested prison concession or a private, public partnership, which he said, would enable the private sector participate in the construction of prisons and the welfare of inmates.

    Among those freed was a young woman, Joy Goodluck, an indigene of Imo State, sentenced to three years jail term in Port Harcourt prison for stealing a half bag of cassava.

    The lady, who was a month pregnant at the time of the offence, was set free with her baby after she narrated the circumstance that took her to the prison.

  • Does EFCC ‘torture’ detainees?

    Does EFCC ‘torture’ detainees?

    Some detainees have accused the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) of torturing them emotionally and psychologically. But, the commission has denied the allegations. JOSEPH JIBUEZE recalls two instances of such allegations against the EFCC and its strident denials.

    Torturing suspects to extract confessions is one form of rights abuse levelled against security agencies, especially the police. So many detainees have told tales of being tied up and hung on a pole or being hit with iron rods in a bid to force them to confess to crimes. To avoid being killed, some end up admitting to crimes they did not commit.

    Those who advocate the abolition of the death penalty point to the fact that most confessional statements tendered in court, and which are usually admitted in evidence, are never made voluntarily. To such advocates, the criminal justice system is so flawed that innocent persons end up in the gulag.

    Some criminal cases are bedevilled by denial of statements by defendants. Even with their signatures on the statements, such defendants will insist they were forced to sign. This often leads the court to conduct a trial-within-trial to determine the voluntariness of a statement. The prosecution and the defence call witnesses to testify, after which a judge decides whether to admit the statement or not, before the main trial continues.

    To address the problem, the Administration of Criminal Justice Act (ACJA) 2015 has provided for electronic recording of confessional statements. Despite the provision, allegations of forced confessions persist.

    Two of such claims were made by persons charged by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) with alleged acts of corruption at the Federal High Court in Lagos.

    While both suspects did not accuse the EFCC of physical assault of any form, they insisted that operatives of the commission subjected them to emotional and psychological trauma, leaving them with no choice but to write what was dictated to them.

     

    Dudafa’s allegations

     

    A former Senior Special Assistant to ex-President Goodluck Jonathan on Domestic Affairs, Dr Waripamo-Owei Dudafa, early this year said he was “tormented” by the EFCC operatives to enable him implicate the former president.

    Dudafa said he developed a spinal cord ailment while in detention at the EFCC, adding that he was denied adequate medical treatment.

    The former presidential aide said all the statements he  wrote were dictated to him, and that he was induced to sign in exchange for his freedom.

    Dudafa was testifying in a trial-within-trial which began at the Federal High Court in Lagos after he claimed statements he made at the EFCC were not voluntary.

    The EFCC arraigned him and Iwejuo Joseph Nna (alias Taiwo A. Ebenezer and Olugbenga Isaiah) before Justice Mohammed Idris on 23-counts of conspiracy and concealment of crime proceeds.

    They were accused of conspiring to conceal proceeds of crime amounting to over N1.6 billion on June 11, 2013. They pleaded not guilty to all the counts.

    Dudafa said he was arrested last April 17 on a Sunday and kept in detention till Monday evening without anybody explaining why he was arrested.

    He said he was kept in detention until April 27 before he was taken to the EFCC’s office on Awolowo Road for interrogation, where he made four statements, including an asset declaration form, which he described as a “sham”.

    Dudafa said he was denied access to his mobile phone from April 27, and his family was stopped from bringing food to him.

    “April 27 till May 12 was so tormenting for me. Sometimes, I was taken out from the detention centre and kept in the EFCC office from 8am to 8pm, sometimes till 11pm.

    “The ailment is a spinal cord dislocation. It was within that period of torture and agony that my spinal cord got dislocated due to sitting down from morning till night,” he said.

    The defendant claimed EFCC denied him access to his lawyers, saying: “I made a request, in fact, my lawyers were driven away.”

    Dudafa said he was invited to a meeting in which all the parties in the case were involved. Everyone else, he said, had a lawyer except him.

    The EFCC, he said, nominated a lawyer he did not know to represent him. “That was the only statement that was endorsed by a lawyer – a lawyer that was not known to me,” he said.

    According to him, the EFCC officials gave him paracetamol and aspirin, and only allowed him to see an in-house doctor when his situation worsened.

    The EFCC doctor, he said, referred him to a military hospital where tests revealed that he had a spinal cord injury and needed to see a specialist.

    “I was not taken to any specialist. My family even offered to bring an orthopedic physician to attend to me, but they refused. While in the cell, I was isolated. They wanted me to say a lot of things.

    “They asked me questions about Goodluck Jonathan. In my statements at the time, I stated that every function I discharged was official because I acted based on instruction. I was dehumanised to the extent that I got scared of people walking past me,” he said.

    Dudafa accused the EFCC investigators of trying to break him so that he could do their bidding. He said an investigator, Orji Chukwumau, once asked him: “So, you’re still strong?”

    The former presidential aide said the EFCC extended the ill-treatment to his family, freezing his wife’s and children’s schools’ savings accounts “in a bid to frustrate and break me down”.

    He said on May 20, Chukwuma took him to the Head of Operations in Lagos, Iliasu Kwabai, who told him that the Federal Government was only interested in recovering stolen money because there was not enough money to fund the budget.

    “They told me they only wanted to recover money and that they needed my corporation. My response was ‘no’ though my freedom was paramount to me. Iliasu said I should return money for my freedom.

    “The Director of Operation threatened me, saying I would remain in detention forever unless I co-operated. He told me that my freedom was dependent upon the release of the money. My wife and children could not feed. Everything became a yardstick for my freedom. I had no objection to what he was saying.

    “Until May 20, my statements were largely dictated to me. My health condition was deteriorating. On May 30, my family raised an alarm telling the whole world that the EFCC refused to treat me,” Dudafa said.

    According to Dudafa, the Commission eventually seized an unspecified amount of money from him, yet did not release him as promised.

    “On June 1, they went to the bank and the money was released to them, still they refused to let me go. They asked me to bring sureties, and they arrested up to 40 members of my family and friends. For fear of being arrested, all my friends and family deserted me,” Dudafa said.

    The defendant said the EFCC officials again told him he was about to be released, and asked him to attest to all the statements he purportedly made. He said when he realised that he did not make the statements voluntarily, he raised objections.

    He said a video that was shown in court where he attested to the statements were doctored. According to him, all the points in the video where he raised objections were deliberately blurred or made blank.

    “I was saying: Let it be clear that the statement was largely dictated. These statements were teleguided by the EFCC and dictated. I was less than a human being while at the EFCC. I couldn’t even spell my name at some point. I was not physically threatened, but I was mentally threatened,” Dudafa said.

    During cross examination by the anti-graft’s prosecutor, Rotimi Oyedepo, Dudafa admitted that he was cautioned before making the statements. He said he was also never forced to admit to committing any crime in the statements.

    But he insisted he was asked to sign the statements, saying: “Most of the signatures were done the day I was released.”

    Earlier in the trial-within-trial, Chukwuma and an operative Akeem Lasisi, testified that Dudafa made his statement voluntarily.

    The duo said they cautioned the suspect before he made his statements, adding that he was not forced to write anything against his will.

    The EFCC accused the defendants of concealing the N1.6billion through a company, Seagate Property Development and Investment Ltd, an  offence contrary to Section 18(a) of the Money Laundering (Prohibition) (Amendment) Act, 2012 and punishable  under Section 17(a).

    They were also accused of knowingly concealing proceeds of crime through Avalon Global Property Development Company Ltd in the sum of N 399, 470,000, among others.

    Dudafa, between June 1 and June 4 2015, “procured” Nna and Ebiwise Resources to conceal N150million being proceeds of crime.

    Other companies allegedly used in laundering the money include Pluto Property and Investment Company Ltd, Rotato Inter Link Services Ltd and De Jakes Fast Food and Restaurant Nigerian Ltd.

    Justice Mohammed Idris, ruling in the trial-within-trial, admitted the document in evidence.

    He was, however, silent on Dudafa’s claims that he was “tormented” and induced to make the statements.

    Justice Idris said: “Are exhibits ID1 and ID2 (the statements) admissible in evidence? Are they confessional? None of the parties have addressed this issue.

    “What is a confession? A confession is generally made in writing to a police officer or other law enforcement agents during investigation. It could also be made orally.

    “A confession must be direct and positive as far as the charges are concerned. To constitute a confession, a statement must admit or acknowledge that the maker thereof committed the offences for which he is charged and in doing so be clear and unequivocal.”

     

    Court’s verdict

     

    Justice Idris held that the confessional statements did not meet the principle of mens rea (criminal intent).

    He said: “Where in Exhibits ID1 and ID2 did the first and second defendants admit the act constituting the offences, as well as requisite intent of mens rea? None has been shown to the court by the counsel, and not has been seen by the court.

    “Let me restate for the avoidance of doubt that qualified confession, which for instance, suggests that a defendant is raising a defence, cannot be labeled a confession.

    “Strictly speaking, an admission of guilt, but with a defence or an explanation, therefore, cannot amount to a confession.

    “It has not been shown that the statements of the first and second defendants tendered by the prosecution amount to an admission of guilt.

    “It has not been shown that the said statements were positive, direct and unequivocal as to the commission of the offence for which the defendants were charged.

    “I cannot in the circumstances hold that these statements are indeed, confessional statements. In the circumstances, I hold that the statements are admissible at this stage.

    “They are admitted and marked as Exhibits G-G15 in respect of the statement of the first defendant, and Exhibit H-H40 in respect of the second defendant.”

     

    Ex-INEC chief’s claims

     

    A former Administrative Secretary at the Kwara State office of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), Mr Christian Nwosu, told the court last Thursday that the EFCC allegedly forced him to surrender his property worth N30million. He said he was also induced to part with N5million to regain his freedom.

    According to him, the statements he made at the EFCC were dictated to him while the one he made voluntarily was described as “rubbish”.

    Nwosu and Tijani Inda Bashir were accused of receiving N30million bribe from former Petroleum Minister Mrs Diezani Alison-Madueke to rig the 2015 general election results.

    They were arraigned along with Yisa Adedoyin, who pleaded guilty to receiving cash payment of N70,050,000 from Mrs Alison-Madueke.

    Mrs Alison-Madueke is also named in the charge, but is said to be “at large”.

    Adedoyin was convicted following a plea bargain with the EFCC in which he agreed to pay a fine of N10million and to forfeit his illicitly-acquired assets.

    Nwosu pleaded guilty at first and entered a plea bargain with the EFCC, but Justice Idris rejected the agreement on the basis that it was not severe enough.

    in court on the day of his arraignment. The statements were devoid of threat, duress or any promise whatsoever. He was never threatened or promised anything to admit to a crime,” Zakari said.

    Justice Mohamed Idris adjourned until November 2 and 15 for continuation of trial within trial.

     

    EFCC: No need to torture suspects

     

    EFCC chairman Ibrahim Magu said the commission has no reason to torture suspects. He said the agency’s functions involve the use of facts and figures, which suspects are asked to explain. He denied that the commission tortures suspects in its detention centres to extract confessions. Magu said suspects who get sick are immediately taken to the commission’s clinic or referred to a hospital.

    The EFCC chairman, represented at a briefing in September last year by Deputy Director of Operations, Lagos Zonal Office, Mr illiyasu Kwarbai, said suspects are only detained beyond 48 hours with a court order.

    According to him, medical bills incurred by anyone in detention were borne by the commission. Suspects, he said, are fed three times daily, adding that EFCC has an open-door policy.

    Kwarbai, who took journalists and civil society leaders on a tour of the commissions Lagos facilities, said despite the resistance of some accused persons, the operatives are professional in their approach.

    Among the facilities visited was EFCC’s detention centre on 7, Okotie-Eboh Street, Ikoyi, its clinic, interview rooms and computerised offices.

    Each room in the detention facility, with male and female sections, has a mattress, a shower and a toilet. Kwarbai said two suspects are assigned to a room.

    There is also a church, named “House of Reconciliation with God”, and a mosque. The clinic has two consulting rooms with two doctors, nurses and a dispensary.

    Kwarbai said: “In the course of interviews, some other windows will be opened, which may require further interrogation. In that case we secure court order or remand warrant to enable us keep them.

    “Before we put them in detention we serve them with bail conditions which they will sign. They’re immediately admitted to bail pending when they produce reasonable sureties, so that if they’re released we ensure that they come back.

    “So, we don’t beat any person here. We don’t extract confessional statements. We investigate financial crimes, not robbery or murder where suspects leave the scene and make up an alibi.

    “We don’t need confessional statements to gather facts and figures. We go to the banks and other places and get our facts. There is no need for us to introduce any harsh method of interrogation at all. We don’t do it.”

    According to him, some suspects who were used to life of luxury “fall sick” once they are taken to the detention centre. He said a vehicle is stationed at the centre to move any sick person to the clinic, which the EFCC staff also use.

     

  • Chief judge frees 43 underage detainees

    Lagos State Chief Judge Justice Oluwafunmilayo Atilade yesterday freed 43 underage Ikoyi Prison inmates.

    But 12 of them were not handed over to the Ministry of Youths and Social Welfare officials.

    Justice Atilade said that they be taken to Adigbe Foster Home at Pansheke in Ogun State “owing to the nature of their offences.”

    Their offences border on rape, attempted murder, murder and armed robbery.

    Two of the inmates, who were not remorseful during interview, were not freed.

    They told the Chief Judge that they were in prison for selling and smoking Indian hemp.

    The exercise was carried out as part of the efforts to rid the prisons of minors, enforce the Child Rights Act and also decongest the overfilled facilities.

    “I pronounce you free, pursuant to the provisions of Sections 1(1) of the Criminal Justice (Release from Custody) Act, 2007 as well as Section 35 of the 1999 Constitution. You are all hereby released from prison custody. Go and sin no more”, Justice Atilade said.

    She said the government was not comfortable with having minors in prison inmates in prisons.

    She praised the Head of Prison Ministry of the Fountain of Life Church, Mrs. Dupe Olubamowo, whose petition triggered her prison visit.

    The Prison Decongestion Committee Chairman Justice Oluwatoyin Ipaye said the issue of underage detainees was at the heart of Lagos Judiciary.

    She said no child would be allowed to remain in prison again as the exercise would be continuous.

    She said: “The month of August has been a golden one in the calendar of the judiciary. We got alerted on the existence of children in prisons. On August 1, the chief judge released 80 children from Badagry Prison. Again on August 14, underage numbering 62 were freed from Kirikiri Women and Medium Security Prisons”.

    Head of the Family Courts, Justice Yetunde Idowu said no child below the age of 18 would be allowed to stay in prison again.

    According to her, appropriate steps would be taken to ensure that children were no longer sent to prison.

    The Deputy Controller of Prisons, Julius Ezugwu, said of 56 juveniles were in Ikoyi Prisons.

  • Prison visit: Political detainees’ wives urge Fayose to release husbands

    Prison visit: Political detainees’ wives urge Fayose to release husbands

    Wives, children and associates of some political detainees held at Federal Prisons, Ado Ekiti, have called on Governor Ayo Fayose to release them having spent years in detention on alleged trumped-up charges.

    They made the plea on Wednesday during Fayose’s tour of prison facilities during which the governor also pardoned some inmates. Some All Progressives Congress (APC) members detained in prison are standing trial for their alleged complicity in the murder of Fayose’s ally and former chairman of the National Union of Road Transport Workers (NURTW), Omolafe Aderiye, an allegation they denied.

    Those on trial include the state leader of Oodua Peoples Congress (OPC), Adeniyi Adedipe; two former state chairmen of Road Transport Employers Association of Nigeria (RTEAN), Bayo Aderiye and Rotimi Olanbiwonnu; Sola Durodola, Ajayi Kayode, Oso Farotimi and Sola Adenijo.

    Fayose could not ensure release of any of the inmates as the Chief Judge, Justice Simon Daramola advised that due process must be followed before the governor could facilitate their pardon and release. There was drama shortly after Fayose arrived as the wives of the detainees knelt down pleading that he release their breadwinners for them to reunite with their families and revive their ‘dead’ businesses.

    They claimed that their husbands knew nothing about the alleged murder. But Fayose said: “We would pardon some inmates, but we have to follow due process. We must have the facts and figures before vetoing their release.

    We have come to see the facilities in the prison and see how we can help. We have seen the facilities here and we are not happy. “The buildings here houses almost 200 people but whatever their offences they are still entitled to good condition of living. We therefore appeal to the Federal Government to upgrade the facilities available for prison inmates in the state here.

    “The walls surrounding the prison are vulnerable, that was why we experienced the last jailbreak, but that would not happen again. As a state government, we will support the prison with an additional building, a borehole, health facilities and toilet facilities.

    “We appeal to the government to live up to their responsibilities. I also appeal to the prison inmates, you must be of good conduct so they can get pardon. Also make sure that you repent truly.” Fayose was joined on the visit by the Commissioner of Police, Abdullahi Chafe and the Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice, Owoseni Ajayi and other senior government officials.

  • Freed detainees

    •It’s one thing to set innocent Boko Haram fighters free, it’s another to reintegrate them to society

    Considering the havoc wreaked by the Boko Haram insurgents, especially in the northeastern part of the country, it could be tempting to want to keep at an arm’s length, anyone arrested in the course of battle with the insurgents. Indeed, some people would want such persons summarily tried and executed, the same way the sect members would treat their victims. But this would not be in line with our justice system that deems all suspects innocent until proven guilty by a court of law.

    It is on this note that we welcome the release of the 593 persons detained on suspicion of having links with Boko Haram, following their clearance by the military authorities. This shows that Nigeria is not a jungle; it is a country governed by the rule of law. Anyone can be held as suspect over a crime but the moment it is clear that there is no proof linking the person to the crime, the only sensible thing to do is to free the suspect.

    We commend the Chief of Army Staff (COAS), Tukur Buratai, who ordered the immediate release of the detainees, in fulfillment of his promise that no Boko Haram suspect would be held a day longer than necessary.

    Major-General Lucky Irabor, Theatre Commander of Operation Lafiya Dole, who handed over the detainees to the Borno State government on behalf of the COAS said: “The Chief of Army Staff has always made it clear at different fora that all persons arrested in the course of the anti-insurgency war in the North-East will not stay a minute more than necessary. Persons either arrested by the military or arrested and brought to the military by another person will not be allowed to stay more than necessary,” he emphasised.

    Since 2009 when the sect went violent, following the death of its head, Mohammed Yusuf, in custody, its members had murdered tens of thousands of people, carrying out attacks on churches, villages, marketplaces, government buildings, police stations, and prisons. In April 2014, Boko Haram kidnapped over 276 schoolgirls in Chibok, 57 of whom escaped while the government was able to secure the release of 21 on October 13, last year.

    Indeed, a time there was when Boko Haram invoked such fears in Nigerians who are even thousands of kilometres away from the theatre of the sect’s murderous operations. The activities of the sect rendered millions of people homeless until the advent of the Buhari administration which has somewhat been able to decimate the group’s capacity for mass destruction.

    It is possible that some of the detainees themselves are victims of Boko Haram; they therefore should not be made to suffer double jeopardy; they deserve a second chance. Indeed, the society owes it a duty to reform and rehabilitate them, physiologically and psychologically. We are happy that Ladi Musa, the Welfare Officer at the Bulumkutu Rehabilitation Centre, who received the detainees on behalf of the state government and thanked the military for the gesture, also said the government had provided enough facilities at the centre for the rehabilitation of the detainees. We hope, however, that this is not one of those empty assurances that our governments are noted for.

    However, much as we understand the circumstances leading to the release of the detainees, we hope the military authorities did a thorough screening before coming to the conclusion that they merited release. This is because any mistake on their part in the clearing process that makes an actor escape justice is slapping mayhem on the society. One member of the sect is enough danger waiting to happen, given the kind of indoctrination they had. Nigeria cannot afford to tolerate brutes in human skin who believe that western education is sin, yet wreaked most of their havoc with the aid of products of western education.

  • Buhari agrees to swap girls for Boko Haram detainees

    Buhari agrees to swap girls for Boko Haram detainees

    President to insurgents: pick NGO as mediator

    ‘We’re for talks with Niger Delta militants’

    The Federal Government will dialogue with bonafide leaders of Boko Haram to bring back the abducted Chibok girls, President Muhammadu Buhari has said.

    The “degraded” sect recently made an overture to the government for a swap of some of the girls with its detained fighters, in a video posted on Youtube.

    In the video, the sect claimed that some of the girls had been married off and others killed in air raids. Following the release of the video, the Bring Back Our Girls (BBOG) campaigners  renewed their pressure on the government to push for the girls’ release.

    It accused the Federal Government of lack of commitment and sincerity towards finding the girls. The group vowed to march on the Presidential Villa every 72 hours.

    In an interview with reporters on the sideline of the sixth Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD VI) in Nairobi, Kenya at the weekend, President Buhari said the government was ready to dialogue with bonafide leaders of the group who know the whereabouts of the girls.

    A statement by the Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu, quoted Buhari as saying: ‘‘I have made a couple of comments on the Chibok girls and it seems to me that much of it has been politicised.

    ‘‘What we said is that the government which I preside over is prepared to talk to bonafide leaders of Boko Haram.

    ‘‘If they do not want to talk to us directly, let them pick an internationally recognised Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), convince them that they are holding the girls and that they want Nigeria to release a number of Boko Haram leaders in detention, which they are supposed to know.

    ‘‘If they do it through the ‘modified leadership’ of Boko Haram and they talk with an internationally recognised NGO, then Nigeria will be prepared to discuss for their release,’’ he said.

    Buhari however warned that the Federal Government will not waste time and resources with “doubtful sources’’ claiming to know the whereabouts of the girls.

    ‘‘We want those girls out and safe. The faster we can recover them and hand them over to their parents, the better for us.’’ he added

    The President maintained that the terror group, which pledged allegiance to ISIS, had been largely decimated by the gallant Nigerian military with the support of neighbours from Chad, Cameroon, Niger and Benin.

    He said: ‘‘Some of the information about the division in Boko Haram is already in the press and I have read in the papers about the conflict in their leadership.

    ‘‘The person known in Nigeria as their leader, we understand was edged out and the Nigerian members of Boko Haram started turning themselves to the Nigerian military.

    ‘‘We learnt that in an air strike by the Nigeria Air Force he was wounded. Indeed their top hierarchy and lower cadre have a problem and we know this because when we came into power, they were holding 14 out of the 774 local governments in Nigeria. But now they are not holding any territory and they have split to small groups attacking soft targets.”

    On the militancy in the Niger Delta, the President said the Federal Government was open to dialogue to resolve all contending issues in the area.

    ‘‘We do not believe that they (the militants) have announced ceasefire. We are trying to understand them more. Who are their leaders and which areas do they operate and other relevant  issues,’’ he said.